National Review: The Power of Rick Santelli’s RantMichael Barone of National Review reexamines Rick Santelli's 2009 rant, arguably the founding document of the tea-party movement, claiming that it was rooted in moral considerations as well as economics.

National Review: The Power of Rick Santelli’s Rant

President Barack Obama speaking on the one-year anniversary of the signing of the economic stimulus package. Rick Santelli argues “the government is promoting bad behavior.”
Alex Wong/Getty Images)
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Alex Wong/Getty Images)

President Barack Obama speaking on the one-year anniversary of the signing of the economic stimulus package. Rick Santelli argues “the government is promoting bad behavior.”

Alex Wong/Getty Images)

After the latest round of primaries, some lessons can already be drawn from this political year. Incumbents are not popular, especially Democratic incumbents. Democrats' big-government programs are hugely unpopular. Economic distress has made Americans yearn not for more government but for less.

How to explain something contrary to the New Deal historians' teaching that economic distress increases support for big government? Clues can be obtained, I think, by examining what amounts to the founding document of the tea-party movement, Rick Santelli's "rant" on the CME trading floor in Chicago, telecast live by CNBC on Feb. 19, 2009.

That was less than one month into the Obama administration. The stimulus package had been jammed through Congress almost entirely by Democratic votes six days before, but the Democrats' health-care and cap-and-trade bills were barely into gestation. Chrysler and General Motor had received temporary bailouts, but their bankruptcies were months in the future.

"The government is promoting bad behavior," Santelli began. The object of his scorn was the Obama administration's Homeowners Affordability and Stability Plan providing aid to homeowners delinquent on their mortgages.

"This is America!" Santelli declared. "How many of you people want to pay for your neighbor's mortgage that has an extra bathroom and can't pay their bills?"

Granted, the words are not as elegant as those of Thomas Jefferson or John Adams. But the thought is clear. Santelli was arguing that the people who, in Bill Clinton's felicitous phrase, "work hard and play by the rules" shouldn't have to subsidize those who took on debts that they couldn't repay.

This was both an economic and a moral argument — economic because subsidies to the improvident are an unproductive investment. We know now that very many of the beneficiaries of the administration's mortgage-modification programs ended up in foreclosure anyway. Subsidies just prolonged the agony.

It's also a moral argument. Taking money away from those who made prudent decisions and giving it to people who made imprudent decisions is casting society's vote for imprudence and self-indulgence. It mocks thrift and makes chumps out of those who pay their own way. We should, Santelli argued, "reward people that can carry the water rather than just drink the water."

While scarcely taking a breath, Santelli went on to denounce the administration's Keynesian economists, deployed to defend the huge spending in the stimulus package and in the budget the new administration was preparing.

"If the multiplier that all of these Washington economists are selling us is over one, then we never have to worry about the economy again; the government should spend a trillion dollars an hour, because we'll get 1.5 trillion back."

The reference is to the argument made by administration spokesmen that every dollar of government spending would put something more than a dollar into the economy. Past research, including some by Obama's chief economist, Christina Romer, cast doubt on that theory.

Now we can check the results, and the research seems to have been right. The administration said the stimulus package would keep unemployment under 8 percent. It's been at 10 percent, rounded off, for ten months now. About 95 percent of new jobs in May were temporary Census Bureau positions.

"Cuba used to have mansions and a relatively decent economy," Santelli went on. "They moved from the individual to the collective, and now they're driving '54 Chevys" — which left him unable to resist a dig at GM and its co-owners-to-be the United Auto Workers — "the last great car to come out of Detroit."

"If you read our Founding Fathers, people like Benjamin Franklin and Jefferson — what we're doing now in this country is making them roll over in their graves." No one would mistake Santelli's cri de coeur for the prose of the Founders. But their grievances against Britain, like Santelli's complaints about the Obama Democrats' policies, were rooted in moral considerations as well as economics.

"We're thinking of having a Chicago tea party in July," Santelli said. As it turned out, thousands of previously uninvolved citizens flocked to tea parties all over America even sooner, and now they're making their mark in primaries and special elections. New Deal historians can't explain that. Rick Santelli's rant does.